words & photos, z to a

Ear Us

Ear Us
Ear Us

After Pieter van der Heyden, after Hieronymus Bosch, after all

distant water extinguishes the town

where it was thinkable for a mussel,

   an animal that otherwise can’t die,

   to grow slow and large and enough

     to be, for us, a private luxury ocean

       liner. We’ve made it, lads!  we all cry,

        climbing into our shining blue boat,

       we motherfuckers of pearl, mantled

    so extravagantly we can’t see what it

 is we’ve made. The musicians begin

 warming up like a radiator warming

 the house apart in the dark, a white

    hot glockenspiel that only plays one

       note regardless until we’re cooking

       in our juices, all extremities poking

  out. We have our children on board,

the owl has the conn, tiller of the dead

tree bearing both our obscure course

   and ballast—one fish, a jug to catch

    a gust and, low, on the end of a long

  piece of string, a pot of  meat boiling

  over the face of the waters—and we

     have all we need for a good time yet

~Holly Corfield Carr, ‘Merrymakers in a Mussel Shell’


57.016692, -135.239344: There is no way of knowing what will be around the next bend when working a shoreline in a kayak as here, another wreck, this one lies close to No Thorofare Bay on Baranof Island in 2013.